Carolingian Craft: Politics, Reform, and the Making of Europe
MTA
Charlemagne’s realm, administrative innovation, and the Carolingian Renaissance
2nd Edition
*Carolingian Craft* explores the deliberate administrative, cultural, and religious strategies used by Charlemagne and his successors to transform a sprawling, diverse realm into a unified Christian empire. The book argues that the "making of Europe" was a process of meticulous craftsmanship rather than mere military conquest. By repurposing Merovingian foundations and forging a symbiotic alliance with the papacy, the Carolingians developed a sophisticated architecture of rule centered on written law (capitularies), standardized worship (liturgy and chant), and systematic oversight through itinerant courts and royal envoys (*missi dominici*).
A cornerstone of this imperial project was the Carolingian Renaissance, an intellectual revival led by scholars like Alcuin of York. The author details how the establishment of the Palace School and the promotion of Caroline minuscule transformed the book into a vital technology for governance, ensuring that reform mandates were legible and consistent across vast distances. This educational program was inextricably linked to social and religious discipline, as the state sought to order households, regulate marriage, and implement systematic catechesis and preaching to incorporate pagan frontiers like Saxony and the Avar Khaganate.
The book also examines the material and fiscal underpinnings of the empire, highlighting the role of standardized coinage, the royal fisc, and the use of polyptychs to measure and manage agrarian wealth. These administrative tools made the empire’s resources "legible" to the center, facilitating the logistics of war and the construction of monumental architecture, such as the palace at Aachen. By coordinating economic production with liturgical and legal uniformity, the Carolingians created a shared cultural and political horizon that transcended local ethnic identities.
The narrative concludes by analyzing the reign of Louis the Pious, where the transition from expansion to consolidation exposed the inherent tensions between central authority and a rising hereditary aristocracy. Although the empire eventually fragmented into the successor kingdoms that would become France and Germany, the book concludes that the Carolingian "toolkit" of governance—its legal codes, educational standards, and ecclesiastical structures—remained the foundational grammar of European statecraft, culture, and identity for centuries.
Designed for advanced students and scholars of medieval history, this book serves as both a map of Carolingian reforms and a practical toolkit for analyzing primary sources like capitularies, polyptychs, and narrative chronicles. Readers interested in administrative history, the Carolingian Renaissance, or the formation of European political and cultural identity will find particular value in its methodological approach of studying governance through material culture, legal texts, and institutional practices. It assumes familiarity with early medieval concepts but provides the framework to understand how Carolingian innovations shaped later European developments.
January 22, 2026
78,392 words
5 hours 29 minutes
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